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Low Band DXing

Low Band DXing. There’s life below 14 MHz! 40 meter attributes Global coverage “Convenient” hours for West Coast DXing Minimal TVI concerns 40 meter challenges Interference (local & AM broadcast) Low Band DXing takes a good antenna. Low Band DX Antennas.

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Low Band DXing

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  1. Low Band DXing • There’s life below 14 MHz! • 40 meter attributes • Global coverage • “Convenient” hours for West Coast DXing • Minimal TVI concerns • 40 meter challenges • Interference (local & AM broadcast) • Low Band DXing takes a good antenna

  2. Low Band DX Antennas The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly

  3. The Half-Square Yagi A New, High-Performance, Low-Cost Design for Low-Band DXing

  4. What makes a Good Low Band Antenna?Common Antenna Myths • Myth #1 Commercially-made antennas are better than homebrew • Myth #2 Directivity and Gain are basically the same thing • Myth #3 A monoband yagi on a 60 foot tower good enough, regardless of the band • Myth #4 Low Band DX antennas gotta be huge

  5. Gain Critical Attributes for an Effective 40 meter DX Antenna • Efficiency • Directivity • Low Angle of Radiation

  6. Quiz Question #1) Between what elevation angles do most West Coast 40m openings to Japan occur? A) 30 to 45 degrees B) 20 to 30 degrees C) 3 to 20 degrees D) 3 to 10 degrees E) All of the above

  7. West Coast 40-meter openings to the Far East(via IONCAP) If your antenna’s main elevation isn’t between 3 and 20 degrees, you’re toast !

  8. Quiz Question #1)Between what elevation angles do most West Coast 40m openings to Japan occur? A) 30 to 45 degrees B) 20 to 30 degrees C) 3 to 20 degrees D) 3 to 10 degrees E) All of the above

  9. West Coast 40-meter openings to the Europe Aiming for Europe? Two to 12 degrees is what you want!

  10. West Coast 80-meter openings to the Japan

  11. Truly High Performance Low HF Antennas Exist . . . Elevation Angle of main beam: 8 degrees Elevation Angle of main beam: 8 degrees

  12. But . . . They Come At a Price! A 350 foot tall Rotable Curtain Array for 7 MHz: $3,000,000

  13. Quiz Question #2) Which antenna is a better for working 40m DX? • A) Dipole at 45 feet • 1/4 l Vertical & Ground Plane 10 ft above the ground

  14. Via NEC-2 (EZNEC) 7 MHz Dipole at 45 feet

  15. 7 MHz Vertical & Ground Plane

  16. Vertical vs Dipole

  17. Quiz Question #2) Which is better for working 40m DX? A) Dipole at 45 feet B) 1/4 l Vertical & Ground Plane 10 ft above the ground C) A Tie: Neither is very good

  18. 7 MHz 2 element Monoband Yagi at 45 feet

  19. 7 MHz 2 element Monoband Yagi at 45 feet But you need to be concentrated below 20 degrees (and preferably below 12 degrees) to work Low Band DX!

  20. Quiz Question #3) How high does a 40m dipole need to be for its main beam to be at 15 degrees? A) 45 feet B) 60 feet C) 100 feet D) 130 feet E) Higher than 200 feet

  21. 7 MHz Dipole at 130 feet

  22. Quiz Question #4) How high does a monoband 40m yagi need to be for its main beam to be at 15 degrees? A) 45 feet B) 60 feet C) 100 feet D) 130 feet E) Higher than 200 feet

  23. 7 MHz 2 element Monoband Yagi at 130 feet

  24. 7 MHz 2 element Monoband Yagi at 130 feet Using horizontal polarization for Low Band DXing isn’t ideal for the average ham

  25. 1/2 l Dipole Feed Point Feed Point Half Square Current Distributions

  26. The Traditional Half Square l / 2 Feed point Detail Main Beams Z RF Choke l / 4 Y l / 4 X

  27. Advantages of the Traditional Half Square • Low Angle of Radiation • Inexpensive, Simple Construction • Moderate Gain • No Radials, Traps, or Tuning Unit Required • Most of the energy is radiated from up high, not near the base of the antenna

  28. Half Square Azimuth Pattern

  29. Half Square vs Vertical & Ground Plane 6 dB at 15 degrees Traditional Half Square Quarter Wave Vertical & Elevated Ground Plane

  30. The Half-Square Yagi Feed point Detail Main Beam Z RF Choke Driven Element Reflector Y X

  31. Elevation Patterns for a 2-element Conventional Yagi & Half-Square Yagi with horizontal wires at the same 45-foot height 10 dB better F/B 10 to 15 dB more low angle gain Conventional 2 el Yagi @ 45 ft 2 el Half Sq Yagi over 9 dBi @ 15 degree elevation

  32. 2 el Conventional Yagi vs Half Square Yagi Half SqYagi Half SqYagi Conventional 2 el Yagi @ 45 ft at 15 degree elevation angle

  33. Gain vs Frequency

  34. Front-to-Back vs Frequency

  35. SWR versus Frequency

  36. 5-10 feet 5-10 feet Dimensions for 7.025 MHz 491.2 / f (70 feet nominal) Driven Element • Height • Feeding • Pruning • Nearby structures Reflector 245.6 / f (35’ nominal) 499.7 / f (71’ 3” nominal) 245.6 / f (35’ nominal) 249.9/ f (35’ 8” nominal) 5-10 feet 249.9/ f (35’ 8” nominal) 5-10 feet

  37. How the Half Square Yagi Performs(The Proof is in the Pudding) • Installed for 40 meters in my backyard • Loaded up as predicted • Actual F/B and F/S patterns consistent with model • 90 trans-Pacific contacts in the first 30 days

  38. For more details on the Half Square Yagi . . . Email me: Jim Peterson, K6EI k6ei@arrl.net Or read my article

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